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Legumes Biofortification (1st ed. 2023)
Muhammad Azhar Nadeem, Faheem Shehzad Baloch, Sajid Fiaz, Muhammad Aasim, Ephrem Habyarimana, …
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Sustainable food production is vital to ensure food and nutritional
security to growing human population. Recently, there has been a
shift in agricultural production system, crop production is not
only considering yield as primary interest to produce higher number
of calories for reducing hunger, but also more nutrient-rich food
to reduce malnutrition or “hidden hunger”. Micronutrient
malnutrition is a continuing and serious public health problem in
many countries, various Interventions to alleviate this problem
have been implemented. Biofortification, the process of breeding
nutrients into food crops, provides a comparatively cost effective,
sustainable, and long-term means of delivering more micronutrients.
Legumes have higher protein content than most plant foods
approximately twice than cereals and are rich in the key
micronutrients folate, niacin, thiamine, calcium, iron and
zinc. This book summarizes the biofortification of legumes.
Detailed information through contributed chapters shed light on
legumes research relevant to human health, with key topics that
include genomic and genetic resources for food security,
conventional and modern breeding approaches for improving
nutrition, agronomic traits and biotechnological interventions.
Landraces possess a very large genetic base in population structure
and are dynamic populations of cultivated plants with historical
origin, distinct identity, and without any formal crop improvement.
They are often genetically diverse, locally adapted, and associated
with traditional farming systems. Resistance genes to biotic and
abiotic stress factors, which are especially diversified in
landraces, are of great interest to plant breeders, faced with
global climate challenge. In addition, gene pools made of different
landraces grown in different ecological conditions can be used for
wheat breeding to enhance quality; yield and other desirable
agricultural parameters. An estimated 75% of the genetic diversity
of crop plants was lost in the last century due to the replacement
of high yielding modern varieties. There is, thus, an urgent need
to preserve existing species, not only for posterity but also as a
means to secure food supply for a rising world population. In this
book, we provide an overview of wheat landraces with special
attention to genetic diversities, conservation, and utilization.
Wheat (Triticum L.), an annual herbaceous plant in Poacae
(Gramineae) family, settles in the Triticeae (Hordeae) subfamily.
The grasses (Poaceae Barnhart) are the fifth largest
(monocotyledonous flowering) plant family and of great importance
for human civilization and life. Cereal crops such as maize, wheat,
rice, barley, and millet are the domesticated ones in the family.
It is still the most vital economical plant family in modern times,
providing food, forage, building materials (bamboo, thatch), and
fuel (ethanol). Wheat has many accessions in national and
international gene banks. The estimated number of wheats by FAO in
2010 is 856,000, and, followed by rice (774,000), and barley
(467,000). However, the recent consumer's (misdirected) focus on
gluten content and nutritional value urges scientists to reexamine
their knowledge about wheat (i.e., origin, evolution, and general
and special quality characteristics), as well as their wild
relatives and landraces for newer possible genetic resources.
Cultured or non-cultured ancestral wheats: einkorn, emmer, wild
emmer, spelt, macha, and vavilovii are still limitedly grown on the
higher areas in Turkey, Italy, Germany, Morocco, Israel, and Balkan
countries. They are exploited mostly for their desired agronomic,
and specific quality. In some cultures, wheat species are believed
to be therapeutic, with bioactive compounds that reduce and inhibit
stubborn illnesses such as diabetes, cancer, Alzheimer, and
cardiovascular diseases. In this book, we summarize the importance
of ancestral wheat species, and provide a prospect for their future
with special considerations in terms of species conservation and
improvement.
Landraces possess a very large genetic base in population structure
and are dynamic populations of cultivated plants with historical
origin, distinct identity, and without any formal crop improvement.
They are often genetically diverse, locally adapted, and associated
with traditional farming systems. Resistance genes to biotic and
abiotic stress factors, which are especially diversified in
landraces, are of great interest to plant breeders, faced with
global climate challenge. In addition, gene pools made of different
landraces grown in different ecological conditions can be used for
wheat breeding to enhance quality; yield and other desirable
agricultural parameters. An estimated 75% of the genetic diversity
of crop plants was lost in the last century due to the replacement
of high yielding modern varieties. There is, thus, an urgent need
to preserve existing species, not only for posterity but also as a
means to secure food supply for a rising world population. In this
book, we provide an overview of wheat landraces with special
attention to genetic diversities, conservation, and utilization.
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